pran, on 2021-July-06, 03:14, said:
I do indeed wonder how you read (and understand) the laws?
lamford, on 2021-July-06, 04:47, said:
It seems strange that may not is stronger than shall not, when "may" is less strong than "shall".
The reason is of course that 'may' implies (for instance legal)
permission so 'may not' implies just the opposite, i.e.
prohibition.
The practical consequence is that while a violation of a 'must not' clause almost certainly will result in a procedure penalty, a violation of a 'may not' clause more often than not will result in such penalty.
lamford, on 2021-July-06, 04:47, said:
Established usage has been retained in regard to “may” do (failure to do it is not wrong), “does” (establishes procedure without suggesting that violation be penalised) “should” do (failure to do it is an infraction jeopardising the infractor’s rights but not often penalised),”shall” do (a violation will incur a penalty more often than not) “must” do (the strongest word, a serious matter indeed). Again “must not” the strongest prohibition, “shall not” is strong but “may not” is stronger – just short of “must not”.
I am glad to see that you have discovered this.
lamford, on 2021-July-06, 04:47, said:
And can you show me where in the Laws it says declarer must think before playing from dummy rather than after trick one?
Law 73A2 said:
Calls and plays should be made without undue emphasis, mannerism or inflection, and
without undue hesitation or haste. But Regulating Authorities may require mandatory
pauses, as on the first round of the auction, or after a skip-bid warning, or on the first trick.
I believe the first lesson to any newcomer in Bridge includes the importance of planning the play
before playing to the first trick.
Frankly, I was genuinly surprised now when discovering that this is explicitly considered in the Laws, it is simply common knowledge.
lamford, on 2021-July-06, 04:47, said:
Also, there is no evidence that the tempo break is for the purpose of deceiving. Furthermore, the play of a low spade from dummy is not deceptive. The ONLY issue, for me, is the remark. Establishing that the slow play is with intent to deceive is impossible.
Law 73E2 said:
If the Director determines that an innocent player has drawn a false inference from a
question, remark, manner, tempo or the like, of an opponent who has no demonstrable
bridge reason for the action, and who could have been aware, at the time of the action,
that it could work to his benefit, the Director shall award an adjusted score
(my enhancement)
There is no question of evidence (of guilt) here, it is up to the player who may have violated Law 73E to convince the Director that he had no such illegal intent in mind.